RESCHEDULED!!! to March 22, 2017 Spring Amputee Walking School is open for registration!

DUE TO WINTER STORM STELLA - This event has been rescheduled to March 22, 2017.

Registration for the event is open for professionals and individuals with lower limb loss and their families.    

All events will be held at the University of Maryland Rehabilitation and Orthopaedic Institute (UMROI) on Kernan Drive in Baltimore. This series is co-hosted by the Amputee Support Group, UMROI and Dankmeyer.  It aims to teach and practice training exercises for lower limb amputees.  Todd Schaffhauser and Dennis Oehler, Paralympians and self-styled “professional amputees”, co-founded the Amputee Walking School in 1989 to take amputees beyond traditional rehabilitation.  

Professionals can attend the session from 1-7pm.  This is a very inexpensive way to earn CEU's.   Information and registration for this session can be found by clicking here.

Patients and their families can attend the evening session. There is no charge for attending the event from 5-7 pm! If you would like to register, click here.

Previous amputee participants are encouraged to attend more than one session.  If you haven't been before, you might find reports of previous sessions fun and inspiring! Please scroll down through OLDER news on this page.

We also have dates for the other 2017 sessions:

  • June 21, 2017

  • November 15, 2017

If you are interested in attending, either as a professional, or as an amputee, put these dates on your calendar.  You won't want to miss these events. 

Fall 2016 Amputee Walking School

Who are these guys?  Why, they are Paralympians Todd Schaffhauser and Dennis Oehler of course!  And if you are a lower limb amputee and haven’t met them yet - check this out so you can see what is going on.  Three or four times a year, Paralympians Todd Schaffhauser and Dennis Oehler pack their bags and leave Long Island, New York and head to Baltimore for a day of Amputee Walking School.  They just completed their November 2016 visit on Wednesday the 16th.   Organized by the University of Maryland Rehabilitation and Orthopaedic Institute (UMROI) at their Kernan Drive location, the event is co-hosted by the Amputee Support Group and Dankmeyer, Inc.  Amputee Walking School is designed to bring these self-styled “professional amputees” together with other amputees and their families, physical therapists, prosthetists and support staff - to teach and practice training exercises for lower limb amputees.  Todd and Dennis, both lower limb amputees, co-founded the Amputee Walking School (AWS) in 1989 to take amputees beyond traditional rehabilitation.

Todd and Dennis began Wednesday with a morning lecture and demonstration session, primarily attended by physical therapists and clinicians, to review the biomechanics of walking, running and other physical activities with a prosthetic device.  They discuss how to assess functional level and learn to look for indicators of successful prosthetic use. Stretching and strengthening exercises for amputees are reviewed along with some treatment approaches for their patients.  Todd and Dennis provide a number of practical demonstrations with the lecture and share their experiences as Paralympian Track and Field Medalists to educate and inspire these clinicians on sports and recreational opportunities for amputees.

In the evening, lower limb amputees and their families participate with a number of demonstrations and exercises, led by Todd and Dennis.  Attendees of the morning session also participate in order to work directly with amputees in the practical application of their morning studies.  As a special surprise, a local ABC News affiliate came to do a story on the event, and you can see that report by clicking here.

Todd and Dennis are very attentive and hands-on, guiding and encouraging professionals and amputees alike.  There is usually a lot of laughter and fun mixed in the with hard work - friends reconnect to encourage each other in their progress and learn new techniques.  The goal is for patients to come to multiple programs in order to gauge their progress after any continued therapy and practice of the exercises.

New attendees are always welcome.  The schedule for 2017 events is:

  • March 15, 2017
  • June 21, 2017
  • November 15, 2017

Save these dates when you are planning your 2017 calendar. You won’t want to miss these classes!  Now, check out this gallery of pictures from the November 2016 edition.

 

 

Get Registered for Fall 2016 Amputee Walking School

Registration for the November 16, 2016 event is open.  There are two sessions.  

All events will be held at the University of Maryland Rehabilitation and Orthopaedic Institute (UMROI) on Kernan Drive in Baltimore. This series is co-hosted by the Amputee Support Group, UMROI and Dankmeyer.  It aims to teach and practice training exercises for lower limb amputees.  Todd Schaffhauser and Dennis Oehler, Paralympians and self-styled “professional amputees”, co-founded the Amputee Walking School in 1989 to take amputees beyond traditional rehabilitation.  Their stories and training sessions are an inspiration to the professionals, amputees and their families who attend.

Previous amputee participants are encouraged to attend more than one session.  If you haven't been before, you might find reports of previous sessions fun and inspiring! Please scroll down through OLDER news on this page.

The morning session is for professionals.  This is a very inexpensive way to earn CEU's.   Information for this session 11/16/16 from 1-7pm, can be found by clicking here.  To register for this session  click here.

Patients and their families can attend the evening session.  For information, click here. There is no charge for attending the event 11/16/2016 from 5-7 pm! If you would like to register, click here.

Dates for 2017 sessions have been announced!

Dates for the 2017 series of Advanced Gait Training for Individuals with Lower Extremity Amputations (Amputee Walking School) have been announced.  

  • March 15, 2017

  • June 21, 2017

  • September 16, 2017 in conjunction with the Adaptive Sports Festival

  • November 15, 2017

If you are interested in attending, either as a professional, or as an amputee, put these dates on your calendar!  

 

Make New Friends, But Keep the Old....

“Make new friends, but keep the old…” goes an old childhood rhyme.  And that is what happened at the June 15, 2016 evening edition of the Amputee Walking School.  With the highest number of attendees ever, the event (more formally known as Advanced Gait Training for Individuals with Lower Extremity Amputations) boasted a number of returning participants as well as new ones - including a group of youngsters who met each other for the first time, and were very intent on playing with each other. One of these enterprising young toddlers decided to investigate some of the equipment the adults were working on, and was determined to master walking on the treadmill. Another decided that weightlifting was more his style.

Other attendees greeted each other like old friends and welcomed the first timers.  The University of Maryland Rehabilitation & Orthopaedic Institute welcomed back Dennis Oehler and Todd Schaffhauser for the popular program. Todd and Dennis are both individuals with amputation who were Gold medalists in the 1988 Seoul Paralympics, and now travel around the country with this event. Hosted locally by the Amputee Support Group, and co-sponsored by Dankmeyer Inc. Prosthetics and Orthotics, the program is designed for people with lower extremity amputation.  Free to participants and their families, amputees are encouraged to attend all sessions, in order to gauge their progress and introduce them to new exercises.  Many clinical volunteers participate, including physical therapists and prosthetists.  As this particular event was in the evening following a session of Certified Peer Visitors training from the Amputee Coalition, many of the newly certified joined in the fun as well!  

The Dankmeyer-sponsored Amputee Coalition (AC) Certified Peer Visitor (CPV) training took place during a day long program leading up to the evening event.  Coordinated by Dankmeyer, thirteen trainees attended the classes lead by instructors from the Amputee Coalition.  These candidates had to submit an application to AC to be considered for the program.  

The CPVs' enthusiastic response underscored the need for enhanced amputee peer support in our region. These new CPVs - including both amputees and parents of amputees - should enable us to leverage some of the resources that were gathered at the AC June 2016 conference to better serve new amputees. A member of Dr Stephen Wegener's program development team (Promoting Amputee Life Skills, or PALS) has expressed interest in enabling the new CPVs to administer the PALS program for Dankmeyer's new amputee patients. The soon-to-launch online version of this program utilizes 8 "self-management lessons", each requiring approximately 25 minutes to complete,  and the idea is to offer all new Dankmeyer patients an opportunity to meet with a CPV who can facilitate PALS training and by so doing, work with new patients over an extended period of time.

Our hope is that such a program will help to ensure that our new patients begin acquiring the skills they need to participate effectively in their care plans, from the onset of treatment. Discussions with parents of amputee children at the CPV training session have emphasized the fact that a significant percentage of child amputees' parents feel a need for a more effective parent peer support group within our local limb loss community. One of our young patient's parents is especially interested in creating a local Parent Peer Support Group in coordination with Dankmeyer and a local institution, and I am currently reaching out to the staff there,  the Association of Children's Prosthetic-Orthotic Clinics (ACPOC), and the International Child Amputee Network (I-CAN) to get advice regarding how to best develop a parent-led peer support group for our local area.

Enjoy some pictures from then June 2016 Amputee Walking School here:

June 2016 AWS, Case Management and Certified Peer Visitor Training on the Way!

Yes - that's right!  A combined training event will be held June 15, 2016.  In addition to the Amputee Walking School session, and the Case Manager continuing education session, Certified Peer Visitor training will be offered. And all of the three individual sessions are FREE! FREE! It's time to register for the event that so many clinicians, case managers, and lower limb amputees have previously enjoyed, or train to become a Peer Visitor.  All events will be held at the University of Maryland Rehabilitation and Orthopaedic Institute (UMROI) at 2200 Kernan Drive in Baltimore. 

Everyone that comes that day is welcome at the evening AWS session from 4-7pm to network and participate.  THE MORE THE MERRIER!!

Amputee Walking School for Persons With Amputation

The Amputee Walking School series is co-hosted by the Amputee Support Group, UMROI and Dankmeyer.  It aims to teach and practice training exercises for lower limb amputees.  Todd Schaffhauser and Dennis Oehler, Paralympians and self-styled “professional amputees”, co-founded the Amputee Walking School in 1989 to take amputees beyond traditional rehabilitation.  Their stories and training sessions are an inspiration to the professionals, amputees and their families who attend.  Previous amputee participants are encouraged to attend more than one session - all free of charge.  New attendees are always welcome!

NEW THIS SESSION: Special activities geared toward child amputees!

Registration for amputees can be found at Eventbrite.com.  This session will be 4-7 pm.

Case Manager Continuing Education

For information and registration for the Case Manager Training, 2-4 pm, click here.

Certified Peer Visitor Training Class

In addition to Amputee Walking School, a day long training session will be held for those interested in becoming a Peer Visitor.  This 8am - 4pm program is hosted by UMROI and Dankmeyer, in collaboration with the Amputee Coalition (AC).  This session is from 8am - 4pm at the same location.  There is a short list of criteria to look at, to help interested parties understand what the AC expects.  That criteria can be found by clicking here.

If you find you are interested,  or you want more information about becoming an Amputee Coalition Certified Peer Visitor, please contact Kevin Hughes at khughes@dankmeyer.com, or you can call 410-636-8114 for questions and registration. The application for this program can be found by clicking here.  Lunch will be provided to all registered participants.